The general manager of the Dallas Cowboys has been working the phones to bring another premier event to his second home, AT&T Stadium.

Jerry Jones is actively trying to convince the pride of Mexico, Canelo Alvarez, to come to AT&T Stadium for what would be a major fight in the fall against middle weight contender Triple G - Gennady Golovkin.

Barring a last-second pitch from Las Vegas promoters, and assuming that “the people” who represent Canelo and Triple G can find an agreement on the cash - all enormous IFs - AT&T Stadium should be hosting its third fight in the fall. Both sides are receptive to Jerry, and few have ever said “No” to Salesman Jerry.

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Jerry was spotted in Las Vegas over the weekend as he took in Canelo’s knockout win against Amir Khan. Jones has been trying to land another fight for years but has not been able to find the right matchup to justify opening the doors.

UFC President Dana White has wanted to do a mega UFC event at AT&T Stadium but he has not had the right card to make the pitch.

AT&T Stadium is a pricey place to operate. Only big crowds need apply. Canelo v. Triple G would be a big crowd.

Triple G is 35-0 with 32 knockouts. Alvarez 47-1-1 with 33 KOs. Canelo’s only loss is to Floyd Mayweather.

That fight drew about 16,500. A fight at AT&T Stadium would draw well over 50,000. With Alvarez’s popularity soaring in Mexico, he could generate more than 80,000 for a big date.

Alvarez said after the fight, “I fear no one in this sport. I'll fight him right now. Let's put the gloves on and get in there with him.”

Settle down there, little guy.

Canelo is a junior middle weight and GGG is a middleweight. These two little big men need to agree on a weight before anything else. Canelo said he would fight at 160 pounds, which if his management team permits there is a window for an agreement - a chance to find a middle ground.

The question is if the respective management teams want to do this fight right now, or let the suspense build while their guys beat the hell out of a slew of bums - the way Manny Pacquiao and Floyd did for years before they agreed to meet at the end for one last big check.